Israel's no-show at Human Rights Council draws widespread criticism, tacit rebuke from US • FM spokesman says Israel had announced it was "suspending indefinitely its participation in the U.N. Human Rights Council work. This policy has not changed."

Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff

Israel boycotted the U.N. Human Rights Council on Tuesday, becoming the first country ever to decline to attend a session that was due to scrutinize its own rights record.

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Photo credit: AP

Israel boycotted the United Nations' human rights forum on Tuesday, becoming the first country ever to decline to attend a session that was due to scrutinize its own rights record.

Israel's no-show at the Human Rights Council drew widespread criticism, including a tacit rebuke from the United States, which said the U.N. process of reviewing human rights was a "valuable mechanism" as it was applied to all countries.

The council had been due to examine Israel under the Universal Periodic Review of human rights in all U.N. member states. Its last review was in December 2008, when it attended.

Israel, which would have likely faced criticism for its dealings with the Palestinians, suspended relations with the council last May due to what it called an inherent bias against it.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor told Reuters that Israel had announced it was "suspending indefinitely its participation in the U.N. Human Rights Council work. This policy has not changed."

Diplomats at the Geneva-based forum hoping Israel might have a last-minute change of heart expressed their disappointment.

The council's president, Poland's Ambassador Remigiusz Henczel, called it "an important issue and unprecedented situation." The 47-member forum adopted a motion regretting Israel's no-show and urging it to cooperate in a review to be conducted at its October-November session "at the latest."

Arab states had been poised to criticize Israel's treatment of detainees, settlement expansion and naval blockade of the Gaza Strip, which Palestinians say is collective punishment but which Israel says is vital for its security.

"As the only recalcitrant state among 193, Israel's deliberate absence would sabotage the principle of universality," Peter Splinter, Amnesty International's representative to the U.N. in Geneva, said in a blog.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Council Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe, addressing the council on Tuesday, avoided naming the close ally while stressing that Washington greatly valued the way all countries' human rights records are examined.

"The Universal Periodic Review has been a valuable mechanism both because it is universally applicable to all U.N. member states on equal terms and because it is conducted in a cooperative and collaborative manner," she said.

Speaking for the European Union, Ireland's representative said it was important to maintain universal participation and the cooperative nature of the review mechanism.

Egypt and other Arab delegations were less diplomatic.

"It is a clear case of noncooperation and noncompliance by a state under review," said Egypt's Wafaa Bassim.

Pakistan's Ambassador Zamir Akram, speaking on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, said that Muslim states had "a great deal of reservations and anxieties" about postponing the review of Israel.

"What is surprising for us is the level of leverage and the level of understanding being extended to Israel by some countries for its behavior in violation of all of its obligations," he said.

"We wonder if this cooperative spirit would be extended to some other country not so close to some major powers in this world," Akram added in an apparent reference to Washington.

A team of U.N. investigators set up by the council last year is due to report soon on whether Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria violate international human rights law.